Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0392680 (shortness of breath)
5,217 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Analysis of questionnaire responses of 70208 persons undergoing multiphasic health checkups showed a greater proportion of cigarette smokers than nonsmokers (excesses averaging 1.6-fold in white men, 1.3-fold in white women) admitting to nine types of chest pain. This excess in smokers was greater in younger individuals, and applied about equally to anginalike and nonanginalike pain. The smoking/chest pain association was not explained by greater alcohol or coffee consumption, diminished pain tolerance, or less reliability among smokers; nor did it appear to be mediated chiefly by excess cough, shortness of breath, coronary disease, or musculoskeletal complaints in smokers. Although smokers averaged more complaints than nonsmokers, chest pain resembled clearly smoking-related symptoms, such as cough, when the number of each subject's complaints was considered. Although more smokers had chest pain no type of pain was unique to smokers, suggesting that the "tobacco angina" concept be discarded or reserved for rare patients with coronary heart disease in whom smoking clearly provokes angina pectoris.
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PMID:Cigarette smoking and chest pain. 114 21

Cefoperazone resistance gene (CPZr) has been cloned from plasmid pFC of E. coli HX88108 using the vector pMB9 (TCr, 5.3 kb). The plasmid pFC DNA was partially digested with Sau3A I, and its 1-2 kb fragments were ligated into BamH I site of vector plasmid pMB9. The recombinant DNA was then transformed into E. coli DH5 prepared using calcium chloride. CPZ resistant bacterial colonies were selected on the agar SOB plates containing CPZ (40 micrograms/ml). The resistance to CPZ could be stably reserved in generation after generation. The recombinant plasmids which encoded CPZ resistance were designated pFL11, pFL25, pFL33, pFL82, pFL86 and pFL102. Rapid small-scale preparation of plasmid and DNA restrication enzyme analysis were used for identification of bacterial colonies. Five plasmids DNA physical maps have been established. Comparison of recombinant plasmids maps with pFC map confirmed that the CPZr gene was oriented between nucleotide no. 3200 bp and no. 4800 + 40 bp of plasmid pFC total sequence. Its molecular weight was about 1.6 kb. There were EcoR I, Sma I and Pvu II sites within CPZr gene.
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PMID:[Cloning and orientation of cefoperazone resistance gene on plasmid pFC in E. coli HX88108]. 1068 98

Congenital bronchial atresia (CBA) is a rare disorder, first reported in 1953. Less than 100 cases are reported in the literature, mostly in young, asymptomatic male patients with involvement of the apical-posterior segment of the left upper lobe. Patients may complain of fever, cough, or shortness of breath, symptoms that result from post-obstructive, sometimes recurrent, infections. Chest radiography and computed tomography reveal a tubular branching density representing mucus impaction or mucocele with surrounding focal hyperinflation. Surgical excision is reserved for symptomatic cases. We report an unusual case of CBA in a middle-aged man with a history of relapsing infections, who was found to have an atretic superior segment of the left lower lobe, with surrounding areas of organizing pneumonia.
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PMID:Bronchial atresia with relapsing pulmonary infection in a middle-aged man. 1135 49

The sources of forgetting in working memory remain the matter of intense debate. According to the SOB model (serial order in a box; Farrell & Lewandowsky, 2002), forgetting in complex span tasks does not result from temporal decay but from interference produced by the encoding of distractors that are superimposed over memory items onto a composite memory. The main tenet of the model is that the encoding strength of a distractor is a function of its novelty, with novel distractors being encoded with a large encoding weight that interferes with other memories, whereas repeated distractors would result in negligible encoding weight and no further forgetting. In the present study, we tested the 2 main predictions issuing from this model. First, recall performance should be better in complex span tasks in which distractors are repeated than in tasks in which every distractor is novel. Second, increasing the number of novel distractors should lead to more interference and poorer recall. In 5 experiments in which we controlled for attentional demand and temporal factors, none of these predictions were verified, whereas a strong effect of the pace at which distracting tasks were performed testified that they involved forgetting. We conclude that, contrary to the SOB model, the novelty of distractors plays no role per se in forgetting. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved).
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PMID:Forgetting from working memory: does novelty encoding matter? 2256 35

We present an unusual case of ventricular fibrillation in a conscious patient symptomatic for chest pain and shortness of breath. Almost 20 years ago he underwent heterotopic cardiac transplantation for the treatment of severe idiopathic cardiomyopathy. In the precyclosporine era, this technique was extremely useful because of the high rate of graft rejection in which the maintenance of the native heart could prevent patient death. To date, with the improvements in immunosuppressive therapy, it is generally reserved to a specific subset of conditions. A coronary angiography and a cardiac MRI confirmed the diagnosis. Six months follow-up ECG was unchanged suggesting the persistence of a double heart rhythm in the same body.
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PMID:Stable ventricular fibrillation in a heterotopic heart transplant recipient. 2285 6

A middle-aged female patient, previously diagnosed with asthma, presented with a large spontaneous left pneumothorax. She had a history of nephrectomy for a ruptured renal angiomyolipoma (AML) with a postoperative spontaneous pneumothorax when she was an adolescent. High-resolution CT chest revealed multiple scattered thin-walled lung parenchyma cysts consistent with lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM). Hepatic AMLs and adenoma sebaceum skin lesions were also noted, consistent with an overall diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis. Her acute management included lung re-expansion via chest tube insertion, antibiotics for concurrent chest infection, nebulisation and chest physiotherapy. Since discharge, the patient had only occasional shortness of breath, relieved by bronchodilators. She is considering expanded immunisation as well as enrolment in a clinical trial. Her hepatic AMLs will be monitored via ultrasound for growth. LAM treatment is generally aimed at its complications with lung transplantation reserved for severe disease; however, hormonal therapy and the mTOR inhibitor aim at targeting systemic disease.
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PMID:Tuberous sclerosis presenting with spontaneous pneumothorax secondary to lymphangioleiomyomatosis; previously mistaken for asthma. 2372 18

Anemia is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in older adults. Diagnostic cutoff values for defining anemia vary with age, sex, and possibly race. Anemia is often asymptomatic and discovered incidentally on laboratory testing. Patients may present with symptoms related to associated conditions, such as blood loss, or related to decreased oxygen-carrying capacity, such as weakness, fatigue, and shortness of breath. Causes of anemia in older adults include nutritional deficiency, chronic kidney disease, chronic inflammation, and occult blood loss from gastrointestinal malignancy, although in many patients the etiology is unknown. The evaluation includes a detailed history and physical examination, assessment of risk factors for underlying conditions, and assessment of mean corpuscular volume. A serum ferritin level should be obtained for patients with normocytic or microcytic anemia. A low serum ferritin level in a patient with normocytic or microcytic anemia is associated with iron deficiency anemia. In older patients with suspected iron deficiency anemia, endoscopy is warranted to evaluate for gastrointestinal malignancy. Patients with an elevated serum ferritin level or macrocytic anemia should be evaluated for underlying conditions, including vitamin B12 or folate deficiency, myelodysplastic syndrome, and malignancy. Treatment is directed at the underlying cause. Symptomatic patients with serum hemoglobin levels of 8 g per dL or less may require blood transfusion. Patients with suspected iron deficiency anemia should be given a trial of oral iron replacement. Lower-dose formulations may be as effective and have a lower risk of adverse effects. Normalization of hemoglobin typically occurs by eight weeks after treatment in most patients. Parenteral iron infusion is reserved for patients who have not responded to or cannot tolerate oral iron therapy.
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PMID:Anemia in Older Adults. 3025 20

Current medical management of pulmonary embolism (PE) is driven by risk stratification, with thrombolytic treatment reserved for patients with hemodynamic instability. We describe a case of a man with acute submassive bilateral pulmonary emboli and a right popliteal deep vein thrombosis (DVT), who had persistent shortness of breath, tachycardia, and hypoxemia but remained normotensive and was therefore not treated with thrombolytics until he suffered a fatal cardiac arrest on hospital day six. We examine the indications, risks, and potential benefits of thrombolytic treatment in patients with submassive PE who exhibit signs of instability but do not meet current indications for thrombolytic treatment with persistent hypotension or shock.
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PMID:Submassive Pulmonary Embolism: A Re-evaluation of Hemodynamic Instability. 3131 70

In all young and middle-aged patients presenting with symptoms of acute heart failure and new heart murmurs, sinus of Valsalva aneurysm (SVA) rupture should be considered in the differential diagnosis. Most of SVAs rupture into the right side of the heart. Percutaneous closure is a less invasive alternative to surgery. A 25-year-old man presented with shortness of breath New York Heart Association class III of nine months' duration with a progressive course. He had a continuous murmur with maximum intensity over the left sternal border and propagated all over the pericardium. Chest radiographs revealed moderate congestion. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiograms with 3D imaging revealed a shunt between the ruptured noncoronary SVA and the right atrium. Percutaneous closure decided; the wire passed from superior vena caca through the ruptured sinus to the aorta. The distal disc of the device deployed in the aorta and the proximal disc in the right atrium. The ruptured aneurysm closed with no more flow to the right atrium. The patient was discharged from the hospital after two days. In conclusion, device closure of ruptured coronary sinus to the right atrium is feasible and safe. Surgery should be reserved for patients with failed device closure. <Learning objective: The feasibility, safety, and technique of transcatheter closure of ruptured noncoronary sinus of Valsalva to the right atrium. The role of transesophageal echocardiography in ruptured sinus of Valsalva diagnosis and guiding the device closure.>.
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PMID:Percutaneous closure of ruptured noncoronary sinus of Valsalva to right atrium causing severe right heart failure, a case report. 3204 59

Peripheral pulmonary artery stenosis (PAS) is an abnormal narrowing of the pulmonary vasculature and can form anywhere within the pulmonary artery tree. PAS is a congenital or an acquired disease, and its severity depends on the etiology, location, and number of stenoses. Most often seen in infants and young children, some symptoms include shortness of breath, fatigue, and tachycardia. Symptoms can progressively worsen over time as right ventricular pressure increases, leading to further complications including pulmonary artery hypertension and systolic and diastolic dysfunctions. The current treatment options for PAS include simple balloon angioplasty, cutting balloon angioplasty, and stent placement. Simple balloon angioplasty is the most basic therapeutic option for proximally located PAS. Cutting balloon angioplasty is utilized for more dilation-resistant PAS vessels and for more distally located PAS. Stent placement is the most effective option seen to treat the majority of PAS; however, it requires multiple re-interventions for serial dilations and is generally reserved for PAS vessels that are resistant to angioplasty.
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PMID:Treatment of Peripheral Pulmonary Artery Stenosis. 3205 44


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